Emma Seligman

Film

Birthday May 3, 1995

Birth Sign Taurus

Birthplace Toronto, Ontario, Canada

Age 28 years old

Nationality Canada

#18570 Most Popular

1995

Emma Seligman (born May 3, 1995) is a Canadian film director and screenwriter.

2017

She studied film at New York University Tisch School of the Arts, graduating in May 2017.

Seligman remained in New York after graduating, interning with the production company Animal Kingdom.

While at NYU, she made short films including Lonewoods, Void and her senior thesis film, Shiva Baby.

During this time, Seligman also interned at a variety of production studios.

She also served on the Toronto International Film Festival's select youth committee, where she helped program films for the festival.

2018

Her thesis film, Shiva Baby, was selected for 2018 South by Southwest film festival.

At the encouragement of the short film's star, Rachel Sennott, whom she befriended during the audition process, Seligman began developing it into a feature, where Sennott would reprise her lead role.

2020

She is best known for directing the comedy films Shiva Baby (2020) and Bottoms (2023).

Seligman was born in Toronto to a Jewish family.

She attended Northern Secondary School in Toronto.

She grew up watching At the Movies with Ebert & Roeper wanting to "be Roger Ebert."

As a teenager, Seligman ran a now-defunct blog called Confessions of a Teenage Film Buff and contributed film reviews to The Huffington Post, including a review for Spring Breakers, which she wrote at just seventeen years old.

The feature-length version of Shiva Baby was set to premiere at 2020 South by Southwest, but the premiere was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

The film eventually premiered at the 2020 Toronto International Film Festival.

Shiva Baby was met with critical acclaim.

Kristy Puchko of The Playlist wrote, "It's astounding this is Seligman's first film, [considering] how masterfully she orchestrates the tension and comedy," and Dana Piccoli for Queer Media Matters praised that "while Seligman is still a relative newcomer to the film world, she handles Shiva Baby like an experienced pro."

In 2022, the film won the John Cassavetes Award from Film Independent, at the time designated for productions with budgets of $500,000 or less.

Seligman reunited with Rachel Sennott for her second feature film, Bottoms, a teen sex comedy in which two high school lesbians start a fight club in order to attract their cheerleader crushes.

Seligman had the idea for the film while still at Tisch, and began working on it with Sennott there.

Bottoms was scored by English singer-songwriter Charli XCX.

To promote Bottoms, Seligman appeared on the cover of New York Magazine with the films’ stars Rachel Sennott and Ayo Edebiri.

The film headlined the SXSW film festival on March 11, 2023.

Aisha Harris of NPR praised the film writing, "Sennott and Seligman strike both a sweet and an abrasive tone that's tricky to pull off, though they do so quite handily."

Seligman's inspiration for the film came from high-school comedies such as Bring It On, Mean Girls, and Grease.

Seligman's work often focuses on sexual themes, particularly women's relationship to sex.

Regarding this choice, she has stated:

She has discussed her filmmaking process as a very collaborative experience, and enjoys being able to discuss her work with her actors.

Seligman is Jewish and was raised in a Reform Judaism Ashkenazi community in Toronto, and had her Bat Mitzvah ceremony on Masada in Israel.

The theme of her Bat Mitzvah was filmmakers.

She briefly moved to Los Angeles in 2021, but now resides in Bushwick.

She has an older sister, Lindsey Seligman, who appeared as an extra in her film Shiva Baby.

Seligman uses both she/her and they/them pronouns.

She formerly identified as bisexual, but as of 2023 considers herself "just gay."

Seligman is a member of Jewish Voice for Peace.

Her favorite Jewish movies are Yentl, Keeping the Faith, Fiddler on the Roof, Kissing Jessica Stein, Crossing Delancey and A Serious Man.

She has stated, “Looking back, I don’t know how my Jewish film journey, how ‘Shiva Baby,’ would have come about without those movies, or what it would have been like without them laying the groundwork."